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#Squier Bass VI
homeoftone · 1 year
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Squier Bass VI finished up this week for a customer. Setup on the Stringjoy Signatures ‘Balanced Medium’ Bass VI string set, huge transformation in play-ability over the factory strings and setup. 
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the-takosader · 11 days
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Y'know, I don't get the whole "guitar or bass" thing. It feels like a Splatfest that's been going on for decades at this point.
If we're being totally honest, I think that you should be allowed to play what you wanna play, and if you wanna play both, then play both.
Now, I'm not saying to go all Mike Rutherford, and make a double-neck guitar with a bass. One, that's a little overboard, and two, someone already beat you to the punch.
What I mean is more like "play what you want, when you want, I'm not stopping you," because if I can get ideas about buying and playing this thing...
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...who am I to judge about you playing guitar like a bass or vice versa. Bring some of your playstyle to it!
Now, does this mean I'm abandoning the Telecaster Bass VI? No. I've not abandoned a build project yet, and I'm not starting with the bass. It might get delayed, sure. The Fretless is currently in for refinishing, and I've just started back at college again.
But other than that? I think we're still on track for the TB6 to be the next project. And then, who knows, maybe I'll actually do a scratch build. That'd be a fun thing to take up the next 2 years.
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ubernaut · 10 months
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A semi-recent pic with one of my coolest and most unique instruments, my Squier Bass VI - yes, it’s a bass lol, guitar like as it may look ☺️
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jbirdbirdbird · 6 months
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here's all the guitars i currently use :3
in order of image and, if multiple pictured, left to right:
1. ~'98-'04 Danelectro silverburst 6/12
2. early 2000s Schecter transparent orange Diamond Series Extreme 5 (defretted) / ~'63-'66 Harmony 2burst Silhouette (signed by Gene Simmons 🤮 i bought it like that)
3. '13 Squier 3burst Vintage Modified Bass VI / '13 Squier olympic white Vintage Modified Jazzmaster
4. '15 Ibanez mint green Talman Bass (i added a D-tuner!)
5. '21 Squier burgundy mist Affinity Jazzmaster / '19 Squier aged olympic white Affinity Starcaster
6. '22 Squier lake placid blue 40th Ann Gold Edition Jazzmaster
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and the freak who uses them >.<
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i-love-guitars · 2 years
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Squier Classic Vibe Bass VI Purple Metallic 
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velmas-guitar-shop · 1 year
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So I’m now seriously planning my first complete custom build.
It’ll be a Bass VI style instrument, a 30” scale six-string tuned an octave below a regular guitar.
There’s a few of these on the market:
Fender’s Bass VI, which uses a similar body as their old Electric XII twelve-string, with three Jaguar-style pickups and vibrato unit. Originally produced in the 1960s as a ‘tic tac’ bass, for country music, where it doubled lines below the guitar. It’s periodically been available since then, currently as a Squier Classic Vibe and previously as a ‘Pawn Shop’ version with a Jazzmaster pickup at the bridge. They had a bit of a revival in the shoegaze scene.
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Ernie Ball Music Man’s Silhouette Bass. This one could be strung as a baritone or as a Bass VI. Nice, clean, compact design, but it’s hard to get in any colors other than black or white and it seems to go in and out of production.
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More recently, Ibanez introduced a ‘hybrid’ 6-string as part of their Soundgear bass series, the SRC6, and lately upgraded it into a multiscale instrument with fanned frets. It’s got a Soundgear style body, a fixed guitar-style bridge, and bass tuners. Only available in dark brown.
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I think what I’m going to build is something like the SRC6 but borrowing features from Yamaha’s current basses.
an Attitude style body but downsized proportionally; using chambered roasted alder to reduce weight
deep-set 3-piece neck, using inset machine bolts instead of screws, with two angled end bolts to pull the neck deeper into the pocket
Maybe a Babicz bridge? I talked to them about if their guitar bridges could accommodate an 0.90 gauge low E and they said it could be done by filing the saddle a bit, but I’m not sure I’d want to do that. If not, something similar.
Debating pickups. Tempted to go with Lace Alumitones for their hi-fi quality and lighter weight, but Lawing Z-Core Vintage might add some character.
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callowayguitars · 2 years
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Doing some upgrades on a Squier Classic Vibe Bass VI. #callowayguitars #squier #fender #bassguitar #classicvibe #luthier #seaforddelaware #guitarlife (at Seaford, Delaware) https://www.instagram.com/p/CkbHOlVDYzt/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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guitarbomb · 5 months
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corduroyinstitute · 7 months
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March 3, 2018: Six years ago today, we recorded "Youth," the second song we ever devised using what was becoming Corduroy Institute's signature methodology.
On that Saturday, S.A. Morin returned at the location which would eventually be christened the O'Higgins Laboratory of Recorded Sound where W. Ruiz had a makeshift recording setup centered around a Tascam DP-24SD Portastudio multitrack recorder.
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Just as on Tuesday's session for "Fear Is Your Choice," S.A. Morin's tools consisted of a portable pedalboard and the Squier Bass VI. W. Ruiz wielded a mixed array of machines consisting of the Korg Monologue through a Hall of Fame 2 shimmer reverb, plus a Roland SP-505 through an Electribe ES-1. There are at least two layers of drums (the glitch-centric one being audible at the end of the song) and three layers of Bass VI.
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After recording our improvisations, we made stanzas using cutups from the B. Davis Archive and proceeded to sing. On the final stanza, we recorded ourselves independently reading the words plus part of the chorus, then we collated these takes by alternating between them on the Tascam.
The recording we made on that occasion six years ago today became "Youth." It was song on the first EP we ever released to the public. Bandcamp download codes for this EP are available upon request for the rest of the month.
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mesotokyo · 1 year
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ERNIE BALLの6-String 29-5/8" Scale弦はWarmoth Bass6には張れそう
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サウンドハウスのレビューではBass VIで使うには長さが足りない的なレビューがありましたが、自分が試した限りでは1弦側でペグ部分から弦の端までは20cm近くあるので問題なく張れそうです。
なお自分で組んだWarmothのBass6なので、Fender/SquierのBass VIだと違うのかもしれません。
ちなみに普通のギター弦だと1弦側でペグ部分から弦の端までは5cmくらいしか余裕がありませんでした。なので一般的なギター弦を張るのは難しそうです。
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beatlesonline-blog · 2 years
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elderlyinstruments · 6 years
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Low key morning. (Squier Vintage Modified Bass VI, available now: https://goo.gl/uCpK1X)
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thesneakiestbandit · 4 years
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These were my weapons of choice in 2016
2013 Squier Bass VI
2007 Squier Precision bass with a 2013 J-bass neck
1989 Squier Stratocaster MIK
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jeantue · 7 years
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SLAIN by guitars
I love guitars! Though as a guy in a band, I usually think of the song first and the guitar second. At least that was the case up from my Pie days through Verst’s last album Starship Crash. But leading into our new album David Slain, that started to change. The songs on this new record are built around riffs and I did stuff with the sounds just to make the guitar louder, more cathartic, and more over the top than ever before. I don’t know why. It’s just the way I felt. Anyway, here are the guitars we used to record Verst's David Slain LP..
Rickenbacker 4003 Bass
Since he bought it a couple years ago, John Parsons has played only this instrument. I've never seen anything else in his hands. He just loves it. 
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JP's ricky sounds incredible, and stays in tune like an absolute champ - much better than you'd expect for such a lightweight bass. Like any stock Rickenbacker bass, it hummed quite a bit when he got it, because the single coil pickups do not come with reversed polarity. I have no idea why Rickenbacker doesn't set them up in humbucking mode. Weird. Anyway, I tried to do the polarity mod myself, but realized pretty quickly that there was a possibility that I was going to damage a pickup irreparably. So I backed away from that, and John had Chris Barnett do it. Now it doesn't hum when both pickups are selected. I don't think John ever sets it any other way. The both-pickups sound seems to be his jam and I just love it. 
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Speaking of Jam, Bruce Foxton played his Rickenbacker through Marshalls and it sounded like God’s piano.
I just see that bass and famous Ricky players come to mind - Lemmy, Paul Gray, Paul McCartney, Bruce Foxton, Lou Barlow.. the list goes on. I think that in order to play a Ricky you really need to be a BASS GUITAR player, not a low end or clean player. I suppose you could use it as a slap pop machine, but with no gain loading from the amp, it's a pretty thin sound. But run it through a cranked up tube amp, such as John Parsons' 200-watt Hovercraft, and you are on your way to achieving a very rich, thick, punchy, piano-like tone. Now that we have only one guitar in the band, there is a huge amount of space for John's bass to own. His Rickenbacker really does that space justice. You can hear nothing but this bass in the first couple minutes of Secret Sea.
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That’s Paul Gray on the right here with The Damned. Gray’s extremely sick Rickenbacker tones and guitarish playing can be heard on The Black Album, Live at Shepperton, and Strawberries.
1993 Gibson Les Paul Custom
This guitar is the living document of just how far my Les Paul obsession has gone. Last time I wrote a blog entry, I said that I was obsessing over a cherry sunburst Custom. Then voila. LOOK at the thing. 
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It's gorgeous. And it plays like a big heavy brick of butter. Smooth as hell. Resonant, but not overly midrangey. It is so heavy that the notes it produces are like icebreakers smashing and cutting through a mix like so much glass. I'm pretty much playing this guitar 95% of the time and it pretty much comprises about that much of the guitar on the album, so I guess that makes me a real Les Paul guy. For all the fighting and ergonomic crime involved, it is so addictive and sounds so powerful that I just can't put it down. It’s the best instrument I’ve ever had.
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While I was thinking about this album, and wanting the guitars to fucking completely take over, I kept going back to Iggy Pop's Raw Power - the sound of James Williamson's LP custom through a dimed Vox AC30. It’s so huge and in-your-face. I realized pretty quickly that the stock 90s pickups that came on my Custom were too heavily wound, too dark. The key to Williamson's sound is the brightness, the presence. So I got some fantastic pickups for this guitar - some Throbak PAF-style things that give it a holographic, smoky brightness. Man, that hit the spot. Because in a big way, I was tired of polite and pretty sounds. I wanted this record to be an aggressive guitar album. I wanted weaponized guitar. The LP Custom seemed to force all of that to happen anyway. My challenge was just to capture those sounds and mix them in a way that didn't puss out. 
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James Williamson wielding a generator of raw power back in the day.
I also changed the tuners on this guitar, from the big fat stock Grovers to Schaller knock-offs that I found on eBay. They're not quite as good as real Schallers, but they're much better than the Grovers. I don't know why people like the Grovers. They're heavy and they have all this unnecessary, undignified lash in the way the gears mate up and move. Now the guitar is incredibly stable. I can often play 4 or 5 songs with string bends and everything and it's still in tune. I love the dependability and stability of it. And that's a change for me, because in the past, one thing I've loved about Jazzmasters was their very unpredictability and the cool pitchy wooziness you can create with them. Now when I want to do that with the Les Paul, it all has to be in my left hand - not in a whammy bar or from waving the neck around. It's a different way of playing and I think it makes me a better, more deliberate player.
Homemade Stigmata Jazzblaster
For the first time since I started playing a Jazzmaster (1992?), my Jazzmaster took a back seat to another guitar - the Les Paul. But I did have to pull out the Stigmata. This is the best Jazzmaster I've ever owned, just incredible. And I made it! (See my old blog post about it). It is a weapons-grade Jazzmaster, with all top shelf bits, and it's black with that anodized aluminum pickguard. It's all business and looks like some kind of weapon. It just so happens that it plays beautifully and has incredible halo of harmonics ringing off the string lengths after the bridge. Somehow all those dimensions lined up perfectly to make that happen. And the light swamp ash isn't too light on this one. I think it's too light on the red Jazzmaster I made, but that's a topic for another post. Sadly, I sold that red guitar. 
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Even though I am still more comfortable playing a Jazzmaster than a Les Paul, I only played the Jazzblaster guitar on a handful of songs on this record.. Sick Pretty Pilots, Laid Off For The Summer, and (Nice). There are songs, like those, where the Jazzmaster sounds better, either because you can hear the notes of the chords more clearly, or because a whammy bar is needed to do the parts justice. When we rehearse, sometimes I stick with the Les Paul all the way through, even on those songs. But I don't think I'll ever get away from the Jazzmaster for shows and recording. It's in my bones.
Homemade Telemaster
"Burnt candy grind" is how my brother Matt so vividly describes the incredible and unique sound a Tele can produce with its bridge pickup and the right kind of bright clean amp setting. This is the sound you get just before breakup, when the tubes are loading up some compression, but not breaking up yet, bass is set on 0, treble is on 10. The first three Echo and the Bunnymen albums are rife with that sound (example: Do It Clean). I kept hearing some Will Sergeant style chords over the final ending section of Sick Pretty Pilots. For as long as I've been into EBM you'd think it would have been easy for me to get the sound. But I'd tried several times to get it right, using different guitars or having Mike play it on his Telemaster, and none of that quite worked. 
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Will Sergeant doing it right.
I finally got it right myself with my own Telemaster and a 70s silverface Fender Twin Reverb. Right when I hit record and it was sounding perfect, Christine and Eli came home and I was already late making dinner for them. So I just finished my one take, saved the file and that was it. But it was the perfect sound and take. Luckily, finally.
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I guess the neck pickup isn’t quite aligned, but it’s still a cool guitar.
2014 Fender Johnny Marr Jaguar
This was not my guitar. I don't like Jaguars very much because of the short scale and the brittle-sounding pickups. But sometimes, that's just what's needed, and Fender did a really sweet job on this model. This guitar belonged to Brian Shultz, but I believe he has sold it by now. Brian is a super cool guy with fabulous taste in guitars. We share rehearsal space with him. I used his Jaguar for the left-channel rhythm guitar in Bath Salts & Me, where I needed a single coil sound that would provide just the barest but still great-sounding sketch of the chords and rhythm. 
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Squier Bass VI
This is also Brian Shultz' guitar. I used this to fatten up the power chord refrains in Bath Salts & Me, because it can actually dip down for the low D-flats that are in that part. It's in there sorta subliminally in the left channel, slamming through a Marshall Super Lead with the volumes on about 6.
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Not quite sure what one would accomplish with the whammy bar on this thing but it must be fun to try.
"Plastic Hippie Values" - 1977 Yamaha FG-345 Acoustic (wounded)
Poor Plastic Hippie Values! A couple years ago I took it on a Summer camping trip to the Southwest where it was basically roasted in the back of my pickup truck for a week. Stupidly, I tried to adjust the truss rod while the neck was in the throes of warping and swelling. The truss rod snapped. So now the neck is permanently bowed inward and the guitar has painfully high action. This is my only acoustic guitar, unfortunately, so it's all I had to use to double the arpeggio parts in the choruses of Plastic Cow. 
Sometimes I create parts I refer to as "music box" sections, where several layered guitars play the same or interlocking arpeggiative parts together to form a machine-like arrangement. It reminds me of a music box or player piano because of how prescriptive and interlocked the parts are. I don't know if that's how it comes across to other people when they hear the recording. But playing that particular part up around the 12th fret with some strings ringing open on this super high action guitar was really difficult. It's already the kind of part that I have to learn by muscle memory and not think about while I play it, or I'll screw it up. The high action made that all the more difficult to do. 
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Here’s a very little Eli back in San Leandro with Plastic Hippie Values and a couple Jazzmasters I don’t have anymore.
I do have an emotional attachment to this guitar, because it is the only acoustic I've owned in my adult life and I've had it since around 1991. But replacing a truss rod is very expensive, certainly costing more money than the guitar is worth. And what I really want for an acoustic guitar is a vintage arch top, like a Gretsch or Gibson. I'm not really an acoustic person anyway, so I don't know what I'm going to do.
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ashleyetc · 3 years
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bass vi is so good. i had started to worry that i had built it up too much in my mind and would be like 'oh well i mean this is okay' when i finally got it but no its fucking amazing. it feels nicer than it seems like it should given its the budget tier brand instead of an actual fender, but i guess they dont bother with artificial differentiation at the highest end of squier (about the same price as the cheapest fenders). makes sense since this is the only model bass vi fender offers currently outside of custom shop stuff. shockingly the setup on it was actually real good right out of the box? guessing the dealer does that when they get em cuz ive heard that squier offsets usually have garbage setup work brand new, i mean Friday even has her intonation set perfectly, only thing i had to do was oil the fretboard. the only mod i might consider unless something starts to be a problem is a new vibrato system, this one leaves a bit to be desired but its by no means unusable and is damn stable. also her neck is all flamed which is cool as hell especially since thats purely luck of the draw and not a feature. might post some better pics later. having a bass i can comfortably use a pick on is so good
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wryrecords · 8 years
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